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Vol. 73, No. 3, March 2000 |
Previous
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Court of Appeals Digest
by Prof. Daniel D. Blinka
& Prof. Thomas J. Hammer
| Administrative Law
| Civil Procedure | Criminal
Procedure |
| Domestic Abuse | Employment
Law | Family Law |
| Insurance | Lemon
Law | Medical Assistance
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| Taxation | Torts
| Trials |
Employment Law
Constructive Discharge - "For Cause" - Frivolous
Appeals
Tennyson v. School
District of the Menomonee Area, 2000 WI App 21 (filed
14 Dec. 1999) (ordered published 19 Jan. 2000)
The plaintiff resigned her position as a payroll clerk for
a school district but then sued alleging that she had been constructively
discharged. In a prior appeal the court held that constructive
discharge did apply in the context of an ordinary employment
contract with a "for cause" provision, and that "an
employer may constructively discharge a person where working
conditions are so intolerable that a reasonable person is compelled
to resign to avoid recurrence." On remand a jury found that
she had been constructively discharged and awarded damages. This
appeal and cross-appeal followed.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Cane,
affirmed. First, the court "elaborated" upon its earlier
holding, reaffirming that constructive discharge does apply "in
the context of an ordinary employment contract with a 'for cause'
provision." A constructive discharge occurs where "an
employee's working conditions [are] so intolerable that a reasonable
person in the employee's position would have been compelled to
resign." Besides conditions that are "objectively intolerable,"
the plaintiff must establish that they caused the resignation.
Finally, the employer must have either deliberately created the
conditions or knowingly permitted them to continue. The court's
opinion elaborates upon the various elements. The record supported
the jury's findings.
The court also took up several frivolous claims arguments.
The plaintiff claimed that the defendant's summary judgment motion
was frivolous and both parties exchanged frivolous appeals broadsides.
The court of appeals affirmed the trial judge's decision that
the motion was not frivolous and it curtly rejected the frivolous
appeals arguments advanced by each side. Prior cases established
that certain claims or arguments might themselves be frivolous
but the court of appeals will not award fees "unless
the entire appeal is frivolous" (emphasis original).
WFEA - Marital Status - Discrimination
Bammert v. LIRC,
2000 WI App 28 (filed 21 Dec. 1999) (ordered published 19 Jan.
2000)
Bammert was fired from her job at a food store. She filed
a complaint alleging that she was unlawfully terminated because
her husband, a policeman, had arrested her employer's wife. Bammert
asserted that she was discriminated against based on her marital
status contrary to the Wisconsin Fair Employment Act (WFEA).
An administrative law judge dismissed the complaint and LIRC
affirmed on the ground that marital status discrimination does
not extend to the personal identity or characteristics of one's
spouse. The circuit court affirmed LIRC's determination.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Cane,
also affirmed. The court was satisfied that LIRC's determination
that marital status discrimination does not embrace "spousal
identity" was a long-standing construction of the WFEA that
was entitled to "great weight and deference" upon judicial
review. It rejected Bammert's contention that this construction
rendered parts of the WFEA "superfluous" (especially
its anti-nepotism policies).
Family Law
Divorce - Enforceability of Fixed Maintenance Stipulations
- Estoppel Doctrine
Whitford v. Whitford,
2000 WI App 18 (filed 7 Dec. 1999) (ordered published 19 Jan.
2000)
The parties were married in 1976 and divorced in 1994. At
the time of the divorce, they entered into a partial marital
settlement agreement that made arrangements for child custody
and placement, and property and debt division. A circuit court
hearing was held thereafter on certain disputed issues. After
the judge decided those contested matters, the parties entered
into a second stipulation resolving the issues of maintenance
and family support. That stipulation provided that maintenance
was denied to the husband and that maintenance to the wife was
"a factor as to the family support payment set forth [in
the stipulation]." It further provided that "maintenance
as to [the wife] shall terminate and be forever banned on August
31, 1998. There shall be no extensions on maintenance beyond
August 31, 1998 under any circumstances."
The court assured itself that the parties understood the effect
of this stipulation and then accepted it and incorporated it
into the divorce judgment. Several months before the maintenance
expiration date, the wife brought a motion seeking a maintenance
extension. After a hearing, the trial court declined to apply
the estoppel doctrine to prevent her from asking for an extension
and instead issued an order requiring payment of maintenance
until 2001.
In a decision authored by Judge Curley, the court of appeals
reversed. In Rintelman v. Rintelman, 118 Wis. 2d 587,
348 N.W.2d 498 (1984), the supreme court explained that the estoppel
doctrine requires that "both parties entered into the stipulation
freely and knowingly, that the overall settlement is fair and
equitable and not illegal or against public policy, and that
one party subsequently seeks to be released from the terms of
the court order on the grounds that the court could not have
entered the order it did without the parties' agreement."
In a later case, the supreme court broadened the application
of the estoppel doctrine to prohibit a party from asking for
a modification of the amount of maintenance when the parties'
stipulation prohibited the modification. See Nichols v. Nichols,
162 Wis. 2d 96, 469 N.W.2d 619 (1991).
The court of appeals concluded that all of the conditions
found in Rintelman and Nichols were met in this case. Accordingly,
the wife should have been estopped from requesting an extension
of the maintenance period.
Divorce - Property Division - Inclusion of Termination Benefits
Package in Division of Assets
Garceau v. Garceau,
2000 WI App 7 (filed 1 Dec. 1999) (ordered published 19 Jan.
2000)
The issue before the court of appeals was whether an insurance
company's termination benefits package for its employees, a type
of deferred compensation plan, should be divided at the time
of divorce as part of the marital estate. Unlike a pension, the
plan does not set money aside in a pool designated for the benefit
of the particular employee. Rather, the amount of termination
benefit is based on the insurance agent's performance during
the 12 months prior to termination and the number of years the
agent has been with the company at the time of termination.
The circuit court concluded that "there is no way that
an amount can be arrived at with any degree of accuracy."
Thus it excluded the termination benefits package from the property
division.
In a decision authored by Judge Brown, the court of appeals
concluded that the termination benefits should have been included
in the marital estate. While the extended earnings are not a
pension plan, they are the insurance company's way of providing
for its agents when their careers are over. As future benefits,
they are similar enough to a pension plan to be treated like
one when dividing the marital estate. Accordingly, the court
of appeals remanded the case to the circuit court to use its
discretion to reach an equitable division of this asset.
Insurance
UIM - Exhaustion of Limits
Danbeck v. American
Family Mutual Ins. Co., 2000 WI App 26 (23 Dec. 1999)
(ordered published 19 Jan. 2000)
While riding his bike Danbeck was severely injured by another
driver, who had $50,000 in liability coverage through his insurer.
Danbeck settled with the other driver and his insurer for $48,000.
He then sought compensation for excess damages from American
Family under his underinsured motorist (UIM) coverage. American
Family denied the claim because Danbeck had failed to exhaust
the other driver's liability coverage. The circuit court concluded
that the exhaustion clause was ambiguous and ruled in Danbeck's
favor.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Vergeront,
reversed. The policy was not ambiguous. "The phrase 'limits
of liability ... exhausted by payment of judgments or settlements'
unambiguously requires that the UIM policyholder receive payment
from the liability insurer equal to the limits of applicable
liability policies" ¶7.
"Payment" meant "compensation paid by the liability
insurer and received by the insured." The court's construction
did not contravene public policy or the case law construing UIM
coverage.
Coverage - "Public or Livery Conveyance" - "Hire"
to the General Public
Morris v. Buttney,
2000 WI App 23 (filed 28 Dec. 1999) (ordered published 19 Jan.
2000)
Buttney is the sole owner of a general delivery service that
picks up and delivers "essentially anything except hazardous
waste and groceries." While delivering a Federal Express
(Fed Ex) package, he was involved in an accident. Buttney's vehicle
was covered by a policy that excluded liability arising out of
the operation of a vehicle "while it is being used as a
public or livery conveyance." The circuit court agreed with
the insurer that the clause precluded coverage.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Cane,
affirmed. Buttney argued that the plain meaning of "public
or livery conveyance" limits its reach to the "hired
transport of people only." Looking at case law and dictionaries,
the court ruled that the term's common meaning included the transport
for hire of things as well as people. Buttney's alternative argument
was that his service was not available to the "general public"
at the time of the accident because he was delivering solely
for Fed Ex. The record, however, failed to support this claim.
On the date of the accident Buttney was delivering exclusively
for Fed Ex, but less than 5 percent of his business was done
with Fed Ex. On most days he served any one who needed his services.
"Pay and Walk" Clause - Frivolous Claims - Notice
Hoffman v. Economy
Preferred Ins. Co., 2000 WI App 22 (filed 7 Dec. 1999)
(ordered published 19 Jan. 2000)
Hoffman was injured in an automobile accident with Metz, a
minor driver who was sponsored by her father. Metz was driving
a truck owned by the Emmerichs and insured by Badger Mutual Ins.
Co. Badger conceded that Metz was an additional insured under
the policy. Badger acknowledged primary liability and paid its
policy limits of $100,000 to Hoffman, who then released Badger
and the Emmerichs (the owners) but not the Metzes. In this action
the circuit court granted Badger's request to be dismissed as
a party, ruling that Badger had no duty to defend or indemnify
the Metzes and also ruling that the Metzes' insurer, Economy
Preferred Ins. Co., had made frivolous arguments.
The court of appeals, in an opinion written by Judge Peterson,
affirmed in part and reversed in part. First, the Badger policy's
"pay and walk" provision was valid as to Metz. The
case law requires that such provisions be "conspicuously
displayed" in the policy so that the insured is given proper
notice of the insurer's right to pay limits and "walk away."
These requirements did not, however, apply to an additional insured
such as Metz, who never would have seen much less read the policy
anyway. Second, the court rejected the argument that "an
insurer must obtain a written instrument or court order granting
credit based on its settlement." Simply put, no legal authority
supported this claim.
Third, the court reversed the frivolous claims finding. Although
the circuit court has the authority to raise a frivolous argument
issue on its own motion, the party accused of misconduct must
be given adequate notice and an opportunity to respond. None
of the other parties sought sanctions for frivolousness against
Badger. Isolated comments in the record accused Badger of proffering
arguments that "bordered" on the frivolous, but this
fell short of adequate notice.
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